It will undertake technical preparation for a potential international sustainability reporting standards board under the governance of the IFRS Foundation.The working group will provide a forum for structured engagement with initiatives focused on enterprise value reporting, as described by the Trustees’ 8 March statement.
It also responds to the 24 February statement
by the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO),
calling for the coordination of work to drive international consistency
of sustainability-related disclosures with a focus on enterprise value
creation.
Specifically, the working group will provide technical recommendations, including further development of the prototype
built on the TCFD recommendations, as a potential basis for the new
board to build on existing initiatives and develop standards for
climate-related reporting and other sustainability topics. The group
will also review how technical expertise and content might potentially
be transitioned to the new board under the IFRS Foundation’s governance
structure, with a view to facilitating consolidation and reducing
fragmentation in sustainability reporting standards.
The working group will be chaired by the IFRS Foundation and include
participation by the IASB, given the need for connectivity with
financial reporting. IOSCO will participate in the group as an observer,
given the essential role it would play in evaluating and endorsing
standards issued by a new board. During this preparatory phase, the
working group also welcomes engagement with jurisdictions that are
working on sustainability reporting.
Participants in the working group are dedicated to reporting on
enterprise value and bring together complementary international
experience. The Financial Stability Board’s Task Force on Climate related Financial Disclosures (TCFD)
brings recommendations for climate-related disclosures that promote
more informed investment, credit and insurance underwriting decisions.
The Value Reporting Foundation brings international standard-setting experience. It represents the intended merger of the International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC), which provides a framework for integrated reporting that connects financial and sustainability information, and the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), which provides industry-specific standards for reporting on enterprise value.
These initiatives are joined by the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB),
whose framework guides disclosure of material information for investors
through the integration of climate, wider environmental and
social-related information into financial reporting.
Finally, the World Economic Forum (WEF)
will contribute their work on cross-industry metrics and disclosures
that CEOs of a wide range of the world’s largest multinational companies
have found to be important for disclosure. Throughout this process, the
working group will also engage closely with the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and CDP.
The first meeting of the working group is expected to take place in
April 2021, with updates on progress published on the IFRS Foundation
website.
Compatibility with other initiatives
Consistent with the 8 March statement, as well as IOSCO’s recent
press statement, the Trustees envisage that sustainability reporting
standards issued by the new board would provide a global sustainability
reporting baseline that would allow for greater comparability and
consistency of application of the standards, while also providing
flexibility for coordination on additional jurisdictional and
multi-stakeholder reporting requirements (a 'building blocks' approach).
In this spirit, and in parallel to the working group, the Trustees
will commence work with IOSCO and relevant organisations to explore the
establishment of a multi-stakeholder expert consultative committee
within the IFRS Foundation structure. The consultative committee would
be tasked with formalising and streamlining the new board’s engagement
with the relevant global stakeholders involved in sustainability
reporting.
Project leadership
Clara Barby will take partial leave from the Impact Management Project (IMP)
to be the project lead for the IFRS Foundation’s sustainability
project, under the oversight and strategic direction of the IFRS
Foundation’s Steering Committee of Trustees. This is complementary to
her role as a facilitator for standard-setting organisations looking to
achieve global convergence on sustainability reporting.
© IFRS Foundation
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